Ndindi Nyoro calls on State to include Sh175b fuel levy as national debt

By , July 18, 2025

Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro has urged the government to legalise the Sh175 billion borrowed as fuel levy and include it in the national debts.

Ndindi maintained that the securitization of the loan was illegal and it’s a scandal in the making urging National Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi to come clean about it.

Speaking at his backyard, Ndindi said any financial engineering being done should follow the Public Finance Management Act claiming that due process was not followed while borrowing the money from the local banks.

“If there is nothing to hide about this loan, it should be reflecting in the national loan book and this way there will be questions on illegal borrowing,” said Ndindi.

He said the loan which matures in seven years will have accrued an interest of Sh100 billion which will be paid by the taxpayers.

The immediate former chair of the budget parliamentary committee maintained that this was a miscalculation that is likely to see the country get into a deeper financial crisis.

The MP had earlier questioned the move by the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA) to increase the fuel prices in the country yet the neighboring countries have lower prices.

He said the government needs to address the issue of taxation on the fuel to be able to bring down the prices and subsequently the cost of living adding that the hike has nothing to do with the war between Iran and Israel.

“They should tell us if the ballistic missiles are falling in the country to trigger fuel crisis and thus push up the prices,” he remarked.

“The government was waiting for the drop of the prices globally to fix the levy and that’s why there was no decline of the fuel prices in the country,” he added.

I saw yesterday the government officials running helter skelter, everyone trying to run away from the responsibility and of interest to note was that there were conflicting responses from the chairperson EPRA and the CEO, the cabinet secretary for energy, road and finance did not read from the same script.

“I appreciate the response from the government officials who admitted that the Sh7 levy was added to the fuel process last year but they did not give the answers we are looking for,” he remarked.

Ndindi however took a swipe at the Cs finance accusing him of playing diversionary tactics to evade addressing the matter.

“I want to remind Mbadi that he is no longer the charter boy that he used to be, now he holds a position with responsibility and the docket where he holds is empirical not theoretical  and his responses need to be quantitative,” said the MP.

He said the explanation by the government that the money is being used for road construction is just a mere excuse to escape accountability.

Mbadi however moved to defend the move to securitize part of the fuel levy saying it was done within the law and the Sh7 was redirected to unlock stalled infrastructure projects by clearing pending payments owed to road contractors.

More Articles